The richest of languages, English contains some 600,000 words OED . Of these perhaps 450,000 are in current use. Clairborne discusses the sources of the language in general, then specifically describes the Germanic, Latin, Greek roots of our words. A delightful browse with much value as a reference. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.
A slim, handy resource. The absence of details of evolution from various roots means that it won't be of much interest except as a speedy look-up table.
A useful reference work on etymology. Traces our English words to their roots—frequently through the Germanic or Dutch to the most probable Indo-Aryan origins.
Acquired 1992 "AP" (Circum used books?) Montreal, Quebec
The introduction was interesting, but the body of the book is strictly reference, and boring: just a list of root words and their definitions, as best we can tell. They're mostly Indo-European, with a few Germanic ones tossed in; interesting, but not much fun to read, so I stopped about page 30.